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BUSINESS

Inflation expected to remain elevated


Louella Desiderio - The Philippine Star 
February 22, 2023 | 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines — The country’s inflation rate is expected to remain


elevated and to average 8.1 percent in the first quarter of the year, according
to First Metro Investment Corp. (FMIC) and University of Asia and the Pacific
(UA&P) Capital Markets Research.

In its Market Call report released yesterday, FMIC and UA&P said the
headline inflation rate, which zoomed to 8.7 percent in January driven by food
and utility costs after an earlier perception of a peak of 8.1 percent in
December, is among the dark clouds seen on the horizon.

“Headline inflation will likely slow down from these heights, but our projected
average for Q1 (first quarter) remains at 8.1 percent,” FMIC and UA&P said.

The two institutions said local agricultural output would need to improve
quickly for the inflation rate to ease faster.

“Notably, Thai rice prices (five percent broken) have risen by 21.7 percent
YoY (year-on-year) by January and threaten to upset expectedly milder food
inflation in Q2 (second quarter),” FMIC and UA&P said.

To tame inflation, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas raised key policy rates by
50 basis points (bp) last week, which brought the overnight reverse
repurchase rate to six percent.

FMIC and UA&P said they expect another 25-bps rate increase next month.

National Economic and Development Authority Secretary Arsenio Balisacan


said in a briefing at Malacañang yesterday that inflation should come down by
the middle of this year once issues affecting prices are addressed.

“We are hoping we’ll see a plateau of that inflation. Next month, we’ll see new
data on inflation. We did not have major typhoons during the last few months.
We are expecting better data there. But there are always surprises and it
surprised me when I saw that number in January,” he said.

Despite headwinds including high inflation, FMIC and UA&P have a bullish
outlook on the Philippine economy.

“Most recent economic data suggest that the Philippine economy may
weather the global recession relatively unscathed,” the two institutions said.

While consumer spending may ease due to high inflation, they said
employment, the personal income tax break and overseas Filipino workers’
remittances would soften the impact.

The two institutions said employment may ease slightly in the first quarter but
should recover as the government ramps up infrastructure spending.

They also said the manufacturing sector is expected to drive economic


growth.

In terms of trade, FMIC and UA&P expect imports to ease slightly in the first
quarter, and for exports to dip.

“So we expect trade deficits to average still at above $4 billion per month,”
they said.

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